3 Answers
3

These guys seem to offer some products in that space however it seems many of them are of the remote control variant (not fully automated). Crop dusting is a pretty routine task and you could easily program a drone to cover a specific field at a given time and let it do its thing. The main issue you will face in the current market is simply useful load. Ignoring the military drones out there most of the commercially available unmanned vehicles are on the smaller side and simply don't have the useful load of something like a Piper Pawnee that is used for current crop dusting.

It does seem that the FAA has approved some drones for this use but that was recently so Im sure it will be a little while before we see them. Although it seems Japan has been using them for this purpose for some time.

So yes tank carrying drones do exist (but I cant find the volume of the tanks, they do however appear pretty small).

FWIW any small drone could be modified to carry a tank and spraying device provided it could lift it. All things considered people have built some pretty big RC planes

$\begingroup$Under current regulations you can't operate a drone without operator who has it in sight anyway. You can program it to do the task on its own, but somebody will still have to be there watching it and prepared to take over controls in case the automatic fails.$\endgroup$
– Jan HudecFeb 15 '17 at 19:40

I once worked in the UAV company, which was contracted to supply a system to identify trees. To achieve this, all you need is a good camera and an image recognition software (now to be easily written using .NET).

I have not heard about drones carrying such large amounts of chemicals, so sorry about that. In this part of the world (eastern Europe) we have enough of our own, conventional planes which do the job just fine (like PZL-106 Kruk). I guess buying drones to do that would not be economical (again I'm just speaking for my country)

I am not an expert, but i have seen a few times Octocopter being used in agriculture industry. To carry a thanks of chemical or maybe for watering down purposes, it need 8 rotors to make it more stable. But it is depend on how large the farm or the area you want the drones to be utilized.

I have seen some farmers will custom or attached something like arm to drones. It depend on the load that specific need to carry or how you want to use it. Hexacopter or maybe quadcopter if only for simple task or experiment. But to see Octocopter do the job is normal for me. Seen dozen of times.